RGIS::db270915-9b83-4283-bbe5-1ddeece13682::ISO-19115:2003
eng; USA
U.S. Department of Agriculture, Natural Resources Conservation Service
State Soil Scientist
505-761-4433
505-761-4462
6200 Jefferson, NE
Suite 305
Albuquerque
NM
87109
richard.strait@nm.usda.gov
pointOfContact
2024-03-29
ISO 19115 Geographic Information - Metadata
ISO 19115
New Mexico
World Geodetic System 1984
revision
http://gstore.unm.edu
resourceProvider
Unknown
World Geodetic System 1984
revision
http://www.epsg-registry.org/export.htm?gml=urn:ogc:def:crs:EPSG::4326
resourceProvider
4326
Soil Survey Geographic (SSURGO) database for Catron County, New Mexico, Northern Part
2014-06-09T16:00:06
publication
Downloadable Data
U.S. Department of Agriculture, Natural Resources
Conservation Service
originator
U.S. Department of Agriculture, Natural Resources
Conservation Service
Fort Worth
Texas
publisher
This data set is a digital soil survey and generally is the most
detailed level of soil geographic data developed by the National
Cooperative Soil Survey. The information was prepared by digitizing
maps, by compiling information onto a planimetric correct base
and digitizing, or by revising digitized maps using remotely
sensed and other information.
This data set consists of georeferenced digital map data and
computerized attribute data. The map data are in a soil survey area
extent format and include a detailed, field verified inventory
of soils and miscellaneous areas that normally occur in a repeatable
pattern on the landscape and that can be cartographically shown at
the scale mapped. A special soil features layer (point and line
features) is optional. This layer displays the location of features
too small to delineate at the mapping scale, but they are large
enough and contrasting enough to significantly influence use and
management. The soil map units are linked to attributes in the
National Soil Information System relational database, which gives
the proportionate extent of the component soils and their properties.
SSURGO depicts information about the kinds and distribution of
soils on the landscape. The soil map and data used in the SSURGO
product were prepared by soil scientists as part of the National
Cooperative Soil Survey.
U.S. Department of Agriculture, Natural Resources Conservation Service
State Soil Scientist
505-761-4433
505-761-4462
6200 Jefferson, NE
Suite 305
Albuquerque
NM
87109
richard.strait@nm.usda.gov
soil survey
soils
Soil Survey Geographic
SSURGO
None
New Mexico
Catron County
Adams Diggings Quadrangle
Alegres Mountain Quadrangle
Anderson Peak Quadrangle
Armstrong Canyon Quadrangle
Augustine Well Quadrangle
Bell Peak Quadrangle
Black Mountain Quadrangle
Black Peak Quadrangle
Blaines Lake Quadrangle
Blue Hills Quadrangle
Bonine Canyon Quadrangle
Cal Ship Mesa Quadrangle
Carrisito Spring Quadrangle
Cerro Prieto Quadrangle
C-N Lake Quadrangle
Cow Springs Quadrangle
Cox Peak Quadrangle
Crosby Springs Quadrangle
D Cross Mountain Quadrangle
Datil Quadrangle
Dog Springs Quadrangle
Dusty Quadrangle
Escondido Mountains Quadrangle
Fence Lake SW Quadrangle
Fullerton Quadrangle
Gallo Mountains West Quadrangle
Goat Spring Quadrangle
Horse Mountain East Quadrangle
Horse Mountain West Quadrangle
Indian Peaks East Quadrangle
Indian Peaks West Quadrangle
Iron Mountain Quadrangle
John Kerr Peak Quadrangle
Jones Canyon Quadrangle
Kellog Well Quadrangle
Lake Armijo Quadrangle
Lion Mountain NW Quadrangle
Loco Knoll Quadrangle
Log Canyon Quadrangle
Luera Mountains East Quadrangle
Luera Mountains NW Quadrangle
Luera Mountains West Quadrangle
Madre Mountain Quadrangle
Mangas Quadrangle
Mangas Mountain Quadrangle
Mariano Springs Quadrangle
Mesa Parada Quadrangle
Mojonera Canyon Quadrangle
Moreno Hill Quadrangle
Nelson Reservoir NE Quadrangle
O Bar O Canyon East Quadrangle
O Bar O Canyon West Quadrangle
Oak Peak Quadrangle
Omega Quadrangle
Paddys Hole Quadrangle
Pasture Canyon Quadrangle
Pelona Mountain Quadrangle
Pie Town Quadrangle
Pondersoa Tank Quadrangle
Quemado Quadrangle
Rael Spring Quadrangle
Rail Canyon Quadrangle
Red Flats Quadrangle
Red Hill Quadrangle
Salazar Canyon Quadrangle
Salvation Peak Quadrangle
Shaw Mountain Quadrangle
Spring Canyon Quadrangle
Sugarloaf Mountain Quadrangle
Taylor Peak Quadrangle
Techado Quadrangle
Tejana Mesa Quadrangle
Tejana Mesa SW Quadrangle
The Rincon Quadrangle
Third Canyon Quadrangle
Trail Lake Quadrangle
Tres Lagunas Quadrangle
Tullarosa Canyon Quadrangle
Twentytwo Spring Quadrangle
Veteado Mountain Quadrangle
Wahoo Peak Quadrangle
Wahoo Ranch Quadrangle
Wallace Mesa Quadrangle
Wild Horse Canyon Quadrangle
Wiley Mesa Quadrangle
York Ranch SE Quadrangle
Zuni Salt Lake Quadrangle
USGS Geographic Names Information System (GNIS)
Access Constraints: None. Use Constraints:
The U.S. Department of Agriculture, Natural Resources Conservation
Service, should be acknowledged as the data source in products
derived from these data.
This data set is not designed for use as a primary regulatory tool
in permitting or citing decisions, but may be used as a reference
source. This is public information and may be interpreted by
organizations, agencies, units of government, or others based on
needs; however, they are responsible for the appropriate
application. Federal, State, or local regulatory bodies are not to
reassign to the Natural Resources Conservation Service any
authority for the decisions that they make. The Natural Resources
Conservation Service will not perform any evaluations of these maps
for purposes related solely to State or local regulatory programs.
Photographic or digital enlargement of these maps to scales greater
than at which they were originally mapped can cause misinterpretation
of the data. If enlarged, maps do not show the small areas of
contrasting soils that could have been shown at a larger scale. The
depicted soil boundaries, interpretations, and analysis derived from
them do not eliminate the need for onsite sampling, testing, and
detailed study of specific sites for intensive uses. Thus, these data
and their interpretations are intended for planning purposes only.
Digital data files are periodically updated. Files are dated, and
users are responsible for obtaining the latest version of the data.
eng; USA
geoscientificInformation
-109.047
-107.712
33.462
34.581
publication date
2005-03-07
2013-12-22
Digital versions of hydrography, cultural features, and other
associated layers that are not part of the SSURGO data set may be
available from the primary organization listed in the Point of
Contact.
Earth Data Analysis Center
Clearinghouse Manager
505-277-3622 ext. 230
505-277-3614
MSC01 1110
1 University of New Mexico
Albuquerque
NM
87131-0001
USA
clearinghouse@edac.unm.edu
0800 - 1700 MT, M-F -7 hours GMT
distributor
None. The files are available to download from Resource Geographic Information System (RGIS) (http://rgis.unm.edu).
Contact Earth Data Analysis Center at clearinghouse@edac.unm.edu
ZIP
10
https://gstore.unm.edu/apps/rgis/datasets/db270915-9b83-4283-bbe5-1ddeece13682/soil_nm648_2013.original.zip
http://websoilsurvey.nrcs.usda.gov
https://gstore.unm.edu/apps/rgis/datasets/db270915-9b83-4283-bbe5-1ddeece13682/soil_nm648_2013.original.zip
https://gstore.unm.edu/apps/rgis/datasets/db270915-9b83-4283-bbe5-1ddeece13682/metadata/FGDC-STD-001-1998.xml
https://gstore.unm.edu/apps/rgis/datasets/db270915-9b83-4283-bbe5-1ddeece13682/metadata/FGDC-STD-001-1998.html
https://gstore.unm.edu/apps/rgis/datasets/db270915-9b83-4283-bbe5-1ddeece13682/metadata/ISO-19115:2003.xml
https://gstore.unm.edu/apps/rgis/datasets/db270915-9b83-4283-bbe5-1ddeece13682/metadata/ISO-19115:2003.html
Certain node/geometry and topology GT-polygon/chain relationships
are collected or generated to satisfy topological requirements
(the GT-polygon corresponds to the soil delineation). Some of these
requirements include: chains must begin and end at nodes, chains
must connect to each other at nodes, chains do not extend through
nodes, left and right GT-polygons are defined for each chain
element and are consistent throughout, and the chains representing
the limits of the file are free of gaps. The tests of logical
consistency are performed using vendor software. All internal
polygons are tested for closure with vendor software and are checked
on hard copy plots. All data are checked for common soil lines (i.e.,
adjacent polygons with the same label). Edge locations generally do
not deviate from centerline to centerline by more than 0.01 inch.
The feature edges, descriptive attributes, and the feature labels of the
quadrangles in the Catron County, New Mexico, Northern Part, Soil Survey
do not match with the adjacent quadrangles in the Apache County, Arizona,
Central Part, and the Cibola Area, New Mexico Parts of Cibola, McKinley and
Valencia Counties, Soil Survey. The feature edges and descriptive
attributes in the Catron County, New Mexico, Northern Part, Soil Survey
match with the quadrangles in the adjacent Sierra County Area, New Mexico
Soil Survey. The feature labels do not match.
The Catron County, New Mexico, Northern Part, New
Mexico Soil Survey was published in 1985 at 1:48,000 scale. The
classification and map unit names were finalized at the final
correlation in 1984. An evaluation was made of the soil survey in 2003.
It was determined that the soil map unit delineations were accurate.
Water areas that are less than the acceptable minimum size delineation
of 6 acres have been compiled with the appropriate symbol for perennial
water. The changes were made to reflect present day soil survey
concepts, soil classification, and soil interpretations. An amendment
to the correlation document reflecting these changes are on file at the
NRCS New Mexico State Office.
2004-01-01T00:00:00
SCS1
The final publication negatives were used to develop
ratioed soil survey film positives. Soil map unit and special soil
features delineations were manually recompiled from the soil survey
film positives (scale: 24,000) to 4 mil. annotated stable-base overlays
that were registered to multiple 7.5 minute orthophotographs and
composites.
2004-01-01T00:00:00
USGS1
NRCS1
NRCS2
NRCS3
During the map compilation quality review an
evaluation was made of the map unit joins for surrounding soil
surveys by a soil data quality specialist.
2004-01-01T00:00:00
USGS1
NRCS3
The annotated overlays were raster scanned on
a SCANGRAPHICS CF 500 Scanner at a resolution of 300 dpi. The soil
area features and special soil features were processed in LT4X
Version 4.11. The soil processing consisted of raster editing, map
neatline development, labeling, edge matching and vector conversion.
The soil area features and special soil features were written to
Digital Line Graph Optional format in LT4X. Digitizing and quality
control were done by the geographic information system specialist
and cartographic technicians at the Temple, Texas Digitizing and
Certification Center.
2005-01-01T00:00:00
NRCS3
The soil area features and special soil features
DLGs were imported into ARC/INFO 7.2.1. The 7.5 minute quadrangles
for each coverage were merged together into a soil survey area and
additional editing was performed. The coverages were edge matched
to existing SSURGO data. New DLGs reflecting these changes were
written with ARC/INFO 7.2.1.
2005-01-01T00:00:00
NRCS3
The soil area features and special soil features
were reviewed by the Temple Texas Digitizing and Certification Center of
the Natural Resources Conservation Service for adherence to SSURGO
standards.
2005-01-01T00:00:00
SCS1
NRCS3
The DLG-3 Optional format files were evaluated
with the December 2003 ARC/INFO SSURGO Evaluation AMLs provided by
the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Natural Resources Conservation
Service, National Cartography and Geospatial Center, Fort Worth,
Texas. Upon successful completion of the SSURGO Evaluation, the
DLGs were processed with the December 2003 archiving AMLs provided
by the National Cartography and Geospatial Center, Fort Worth, Texas.
2005-01-01T00:00:00
NRCS3
The National Soil Information System database was
developed by the Natural Resources Conservation Service soil scientists
according to national standards.
2005-01-01T00:00:00
NRCS3
The Natural Resources Conservation Service State Soil Scientist or
delegate, upon completion of data quality verification, determined
that the tabular data should be released for official use. A
selected set of map units and components in the soil survey legend was
copied to a staging database, and rating values for selected
interpretations were generated. The list of selected interpretations is
stored in the database table named sainterp.
2005-03-11T00:00:00
NASIS
The Natural Resources Conservation Service State Soil Scientist or
delegate verified that the labels on the digitized soil map units
link to map units in the tabular database, and certified the joined
data sets for release to the Soil Data Warehouse. A system assigned
version number and date stamp were added and the data were copied to
the data warehouse. The tabular data for the map units and components
were extracted from the data warehouse and reformatted into the soil
data delivery data model, then stored in the Soil Data Mart. The spatial
data were copied to the Soil Data Mart without change.
2005-03-11T00:00:00
NASIS
The Natural Resources Conservation Service State Soil Scientist or
delegate, upon completion of data quality verification, determined
that the tabular data should be released for official use. A
selected set of map units and components in the soil survey legend was
copied to a staging database, and rating values for selected
interpretations were generated. The list of selected interpretations is
stored in the database table named sainterp.
2006-01-18T00:00:00
NASIS
The Natural Resources Conservation Service State Soil Scientist or delegate verified that the labels on the digitized soil map units link to map units in the tabular database, and certified the joined data sets for release to the Soil Data Warehouse. A system assigned version number and date stamp were added and the data were copied to the data warehouse. The tabular data for the map units and components were extracted from the data warehouse and reformatted into the soil data delivery data model, then stored in the Soil Data Mart. The spatial data were copied to the Soil Data Mart without change. In this version of the NASIS attribute data, soil properties related to the hydric soil rating were updated and new tabular data and interpretations generated.
2006-01-30T00:00:00
NASIS
The Natural Resources Conservation Service State Soil Scientist or
delegate, upon completion of data quality verification, determined
that the tabular data should be released for official use. A
selected set of map units and components in the soil survey legend was
copied to a staging database, and rating values for selected
interpretations were generated. The list of selected interpretations is
stored in the database table named sainterp.
2006-03-01T00:00:00
NASIS
The Natural Resources Conservation Service State Soil Scientist or
delegate verified that the labels on the digitized soil map units
link to map units in the tabular database, and certified the joined
data sets for release to the Soil Data Warehouse. A system assigned
version number and date stamp were added and the data were copied to
the data warehouse. The tabular data for the map units and components
were extracted from the data warehouse and reformatted into the soil
data delivery data model, then stored in the Soil Data Mart. The spatial
data were copied to the Soil Data Mart without change.
2006-03-07T00:00:00
NASIS
The Natural Resources Conservation Service State Soil Scientist or
delegate, upon completion of data quality verification, determined
that the tabular data should be released for official use. A
selected set of map units and components in the soil survey legend was
copied to a staging database, and rating values for selected
interpretations were generated. The list of selected interpretations is
stored in the database table named sainterp.
2006-06-29T00:00:00
NASIS
The Natural Resources Conservation Service State Soil Scientist or
delegate verified that the labels on the digitized soil map units
link to map units in the tabular database, and certified the joined
data sets for release to the Soil Data Warehouse. A system assigned
version number and date stamp were added and the data were copied to
the data warehouse. The tabular data for the map units and components
were extracted from the data warehouse and reformatted into the soil
data delivery data model, then stored in the Soil Data Mart. The spatial
data were copied to the Soil Data Mart without change.
2006-07-19T00:00:00
NASIS
The Natural Resources Conservation Service State Soil Scientist or
delegate, upon completion of data quality verification, determined
that the tabular data should be released for official use. A
selected set of map units and components in the soil survey legend was
copied to a staging database, and rating values for selected
interpretations were generated. The list of selected interpretations is
stored in the database table named sainterp.
2006-12-05T00:00:00
NASIS
The Natural Resources Conservation Service State Soil Scientist or
delegate verified that the labels on the digitized soil map units
link to map units in the tabular database, and certified the joined
data sets for release to the Soil Data Warehouse. A system assigned
version number and date stamp were added and the data were copied to
the data warehouse. The tabular data for the map units and components
were extracted from the data warehouse and reformatted into the soil
data delivery data model, then stored in the Soil Data Mart. The spatial
data were copied to the Soil Data Mart without change.
2006-12-22T00:00:00
NASIS
The Natural Resources Conservation Service State Soil Scientist or
delegate, upon completion of data quality verification, determined
that the tabular data should be released for official use. A
selected set of map units and components in the soil survey legend was
copied to a staging database, and rating values for selected
interpretations were generated. The list of selected interpretations is
stored in the database table named sainterp.
2008-10-29T00:00:00
NASIS
The Natural Resources Conservation Service State Soil Scientist or delegate verified that the labels on the digitized soil map units link to map units in the tabular database, and certified the joined data sets for release to the Soil Data Warehouse. A system assigned version number and date stamp were added and the data were copied to the data warehouse. The tabular data for the map units and components were extracted from the data warehouse and reformatted into the soil data delivery data model, then stored in the Soil Data Mart. The spatial data were copied to the Soil Data Mart without change.
This update of the tabular data correlates Ecological Site ID numbers to the ESIS name and numbering system, and includes additional soil interpretations for grazing land uses.
2008-11-07T00:00:00
NASIS
The Natural Resources Conservation Service State Soil Scientist or
delegate, upon completion of data quality verification, determined
that the tabular data should be released for official use. A
selected set of map units and components in the soil survey legend was
copied to a staging database, and rating values for selected
interpretations were generated. The list of selected interpretations is
stored in the database table named sainterp.
2008-11-18T00:00:00
NASIS
The Natural Resources Conservation Service State Soil Scientist or delegate verified that the labels on the digitized soil map units link to map units in the tabular database, and certified the joined data sets for release to the Soil Data Warehouse. A system assigned version number and date stamp were added and the data were copied to the data warehouse. The tabular data for the map units and components were extracted from the data warehouse and reformatted into the soil data delivery data model, then stored in the Soil Data Mart. The spatial data were copied to the Soil Data Mart without change.
In this update of the tabular data, additional interpretative tables were generated and uploaded for several uses.
2008-12-09T00:00:00
NASIS
The spatial data for the Soil Survey of Catron County, New Mexico,
Northern Part was downloaded from the Soil Data Mart on
October 15, 2012. The individual shapefiles were appended into a
geodatabase for Region 8. The data were processed in ARCGIS 10.1
using a topology object with a 0.1 meter cluster tolerance
for the purpose of eliminating gaps and overlaps within the Region 8
soils geodatabase. Individual soil survey area data were exported as
shapefiles from the regional geodatabase. A datum transformation
from NAD83 to WGS84 using the NAD_1983_To_WGS_1984_1 datum
transformation method was applied to the data. The data were checked
with the SSURGO Evaluation scripts provided by U.S. Department of
Agriculture, Natural Resources Conservation Service. The shapefiles
were then uploaded to the soil data warehouse for archival and
distribution.
2013-08-01T00:00:00
NRCS4
The Natural Resources Conservation Service State Soil Scientist or
delegate, upon completion of data quality verification, determined
that the tabular data should be released for official use. A
selected set of map units and components in the soil survey legend was
copied to a staging database, and rating values for selected
interpretations were generated. The list of selected interpretations is
stored in the database table named sainterp.
2013-12-22T00:00:00
NASIS
The Natural Resources Conservation Service State Soil Scientist or
delegate verified that the labels on the digitized soil map units
link to map units in the tabular database, and certified the joined
data sets for release to the Soil Data Warehouse. A system assigned
version number and date stamp were added and the data were copied to
the data warehouse. The tabular data for the map units and components
were extracted from the data warehouse and reformatted into the soil
data delivery data model, then stored in the Soil Data Mart. The spatial
data were copied to the Soil Data Mart without change.
2013-12-22T00:00:00
NASIS
source of soil map unit delineations and soil symbols
48000
Soil Survey of Catron County, New Mexico, Northern Part
SCS1
1985-01-01T00:00:00
U.S. Department of Agriculture, Soil Conservation Service
publication date
1985-01-01
final publication negatives used to develop
ratioed soil survey film positives
48000
publication annotation overlays
NRCS1
U.S. Department of Agriculture, Natural Resources
Conservation Service
2004
2004-01-01
final publication negatives used to develop ratioed
soil survey film positives
31680
publication annotation overlays
NRCS2
U.S. Department of Agriculture, Natural Resources
Conservation Service
2004
2004-01-01
compilation base
24000
multiple 7.5 minute orthophotographs and composites 1991 - 1998
USGS1
1998-01-01T00:00:00
U.S. Geological Survey
publication date
2004-01-01
source material for scanning
24000
annotated overlays
NRCS3
U.S. Department of Agriculture, Natural Resources
Conservation Service
2005
2005-01-01
attribute (tabular) information
National Soil Information System (NASIS) data base
NASIS
2005-01-01T00:00:00
U.S. Department of Agriculture,
Natural Resources Conservation Service
publication date
2005-01-01
2005-01-01
Source of digital revision
Region 8 soils geodatabase
NRCS4
U.S. Department of Agriculture, Natural Resources
Conservation Service
SSURGO publication date
2006-01-01
2012-01-01
Earth Data Analysis Center
Clearinghouse Manager
505-277-3622 ext. 230
505-277-3614
MSC01 1110
1 University of New Mexico
Albuquerque
NM
87131-0001
USA
clearinghouse@edac.unm.edu
0800 - 1700 MT, M-F -7 hours GMT
custodian